# Take the Slackware x86 ChangeLog entries and produce a build script for # ARM, and figure out whether the package is just part of the "x" series or # is part of the X.org/x11 package set. # # Stuart Winter # 2-Feb-2011 source /usr/share/slackdev/buildkit.sh export CWD=$SLACKSOURCE/x rm -f /tmp/x*-new # Process: # # Copy the entries from Slackware x86's ChangeLog.txt into /tmp/l on your # build box and run this script. # # Return a package name that has been stripped of the dirname portion # and any of the valid extensions (only): pkgbase() { # basename + strip extensions .tbz, .tgz, .tlz and .txz echo "$1" | sed 's?.*/??;s/\.t[bglx]z$//' } # Strip version, architecture and build from the end of the name package_name() { pkgbase $1 | sed 's?-[^-]*-[^-]*-[^-]*$??' } ( cat /tmp/l | cut -d/ -f2 | awk -F: '{print $1}' | while read line ; do pkg=$( package_name $line ) # Check if it's in the Slackware x86 master tree's "slackware/x/" directory: if [ -d $CWD/$pkg ]; then # It's in Slackware's X series but not part of X.org: echo $pkg >> /tmp/x-new else # It's part of X.org - one of the modular packages. echo "$pkg \\" >> /tmp/x11-new fi done ) cat << EOF Slackware X series packages (not x11/X.org) ------------------------------------------- $( cat /tmp/x-new ) Slackware X series packages (not x11/X.org) ------------------------------------------- $( grep -v xorg-server- /tmp/x11-new ) EOF # The "xorg-server" package build will build all of the other xorg-server-* packages. rm -f /tmp/x*-new